During the month of March and throughout the remainder of 1965, the precursor to Catholic News Service posted numerous stories about Catholic involvement in the marches and the civil rights movement in general.

In one story, it was reported that a priest from San Antonio who trudged the entire route of the 50-mile, Selma-to-Montgomery civil rights march said he did so to protest the “inhumanity of the past 100 years.”

In another story, priests from Alabama said they encouraged their “negro” parishioners to participate in what would later be known as the “Bloody Sunday” march, where policemen who were ordered to break up the civil rights protest beat participants with clubs, whips and ropes, causing countless injuries and at least one death.

“I can state unquestionably that we priests felt very badly, because we could not take part in the march, but we abide by the decision of the authorities in this diocese that priests are not to join in street demonstrations,” Edmundite Father Maurice Ouellet, pastor of St. Elizabeth Catholic Church in Selma, is quoted as saying the day after that March 7 event. “We did what we could, but we’d like to do more.”

In yet another story, it was reported that more than 600 priests, nuns, Protestant ministers and rabbis continued to pour into Selma in a series of protests that March.

It was reported that by March 15, 44 U.S. Catholic dioceses had sent representatives to Selma, including then Bishop-designate James P. Shannon of St. Paul, Minn.

When leading a group of protesters and clergy, Holy Cross Father John Cavanaugh — a former president of University of Notre Dame — was stopped by a Selma public safety officer, who said he couldn’t believe that men of God would march without a permit.

“We may talk cross while excited, but we ask you pray for us, that you may see our cause,” Father Cavanaugh reportedly told the officer. “We don’t look for violence. We believe in justice for all. We ask the blessings of God, of the father, the son and the Holy Ghost on all of you.”

The pages of yellowing paper in the CNS files are too numerous to copy down for you to read, but the stories are rich with history.

In a 24-hour period at Covenant House shelters across the country, from Washington to Los Angeles and New York to New Orleans, people got involved in a variety of activities, from collecting donations to working in the clothing room to serving lunch to the kids.

And it was all documented by award-winning photographers, videographers and writers organized by the Heart Gallery. They all donated their time.

Covenant House spokesman Tom Manning told Catholic News Service yesterday that he was “grateful and humbled” by the efforts of everyone involved.

The Heart Gallery was launched in 2005 by Najlah Hicks and Pim Van Hemmen and some of the nation’s top photographers to use images to tell the stories of foster children available for adoption — “because everyone deserves a family,” as the gallery’s motto says. Manning said Hicks knew somebody at Covenant House and wondered about using the same approach to telling the story of the nation’s 1.3 homeless youths. So Do 1 Thing was born.